;
;   CIVILIZATION CIVILOPEDIA TEXT
;   Copyright (c) 1995 by MicroProse Software
;
;   Last changed July 28, 1998
:
;   Altering the contents of this file may cause the
;   game to malfunction.
;

@PEDIAPICKCIV
@width=540
@columns=3
@listbox
@title=Civilopedia: Civilization Advances

@PEDIACIV
@width=480
@title=Civilization Advance
^^%STRING0
^


@PEDIACIVFACTS
^Allows government form of same name.
^Allows peasants to build fortresses.
^Allows peasants to irrigate mines.
^Allows peasants to build railroads.
^Allows peasants to improve farmland.
^Increases the effect of cathedrals.
^Increases the effect of mosques.
^Worth bonus points in Civilization score.
^Increases ship movement rates by one.
^
^Free civ. advance for first civ. to discover.
^Decreases the effect of synagogues.
^Cancels the effect of


@PEDIAPICKUNIT
@width=540
@columns=3
@listbox
@title=Civilopedia: Unit Types

@PEDIAUNIT
@width=480
@title=Unit Type
^^%STRING0
^

@PEDIAUNITFACTS
^Can see units two spaces away.
^Ignores enemy Zones of Control.
^Can make amphibious landings.
^Invisible to most enemy ships.
^Can attack aircraft in flight.
^May be lost out of sight of land.
^Ignores City Walls.
^Can carry friendly air units.
^Can make paradrops.
^Treats all squares as road squares.
^Defense +50% versus units with a movement factor of 2.
^Only Christians can build.
^Destroyed after attacking.
^Defense +100% versus air and missile units.
^Can spot enemy submarines in adjacent squares.


@PEDIAPICKGOVT
@width=480
@listbox
@title=Civilopedia: Governments


@PEDIAPICKIMPROVE
@width=540
@columns=3
@listbox
@title=Civilopedia: City Improvements

@PEDIAIMPROVE
@width=480
@title=City Improvement
^^%STRING0
^

@;Palace
@PEDIAIMPROVE1
Eliminates corruption and waste in the city,
and decreases it in all nearby cities.

@;Barracks
@PEDIAIMPROVE2
City produces Veteran ground units. Ground units can
be completely repaired in a single turn.

@;Granary
@PEDIAIMPROVE3
Only half of city's food store is depleted when
city increases in size.

@;Temple
@PEDIAIMPROVE4
Up to two discontented citizens are made content.

@;Marketplace
@PEDIAIMPROVE5
Increases tax and luxury output by 50%%.

@;Library
@PEDIAIMPROVE6
Increases science output by 50%%.

@;Courthouse
@PEDIAIMPROVE7
Decreases corruption by 50%%. 

@;City Walls
@PEDIAIMPROVE8
Units in city are tripled on defense versus ground attacks.

@;Aqueduct
@PEDIAIMPROVE9
Allows city to increase beyond size 10.

@;Bank
@PEDIAIMPROVE10
Increases tax and luxury output by an
additional 50%% (cumulative with Bazaar).

@;Cathedral
@PEDIAIMPROVE11
Makes four unhappy citizens content.

@;University
@PEDIAIMPROVE12
Increases science output by an additional
50%% (cumulative with Library).

@;Mass Transit
@PEDIAIMPROVE13
Eliminates pollution caused by population.

@;Colosseum
@PEDIAIMPROVE14
Three unhappy citizens are made content.

@;Factory
@PEDIAIMPROVE15
Increases resource production in city by 50%%.

@;Mfg. Plant
@PEDIAIMPROVE16
Increases resource production by an additional 50%%
(cumulative with Crafts Guild).

@;SDI Defense
@PEDIAIMPROVE17
Protects everything within three spaces of
the city from nuclear attack.

@;Recycling Center
@PEDIAIMPROVE18
Decreases the pollution caused by factories.

@;Power Plant
@PEDIAIMPROVE19
Increases factory output by 50%%.

@;Hydro Plant
@PEDIAIMPROVE20
Increases factory output by 50%%.  Cleaner
than Power Plant, and generally safer than
Nuclear Plant.

@;Nuclear Plant
@PEDIAIMPROVE21
Increases factory output by 50%%.  Cleaner
than Power Plant (same as Hydro Plant), but
there is a risk of Nuclear Meltdown unless
civilization has discovered Fusion.

@;Stock Exchange
@PEDIAIMPROVE22
Increases tax & luxuries output by an additional
50%% (cumulative with Bazaar and Bank for a grand
total of 150%%).

@;Sewer System
@PEDIAIMPROVE23
Allows city to grow beyond size 33.

@;Supermarket
@PEDIAIMPROVE24
Allows squares in the city's radius with
the "farmland" improvement (irrigated twice)
to produce 50%% more food.

@;Superhighways
@PEDIAIMPROVE25
All squares in the city's radius with roads
produce 50%% more trade.

@;Research Lab
@PEDIAIMPROVE26
Increases science output by an additional 50%%
(cumulative with Library and Mosque for a
grand total of 150%%).

@;SAM Missile Battery
@PEDIAIMPROVE27
Units in city are doubled on defense against
air units and non-nuclear missile units.

@;Coastal Fortress
@PEDIAIMPROVE28
Units in city are doubled on defense against
shore bombardment by enemy ships.

@;Solar Plant
@PEDIAIMPROVE29
Increases factory output by 50%%.  Cleaner
than all other forms of power.

@;Harbor
@PEDIAIMPROVE30
All ocean squares in the city's radius
produce one extra unit of food.

@;Offshore Platform
@PEDIAIMPROVE31
All ocean squares in the city's radius
produce one shield.

@;Airport
@PEDIAIMPROVE32
City produces veteran air units.
Any air unit spending its entire turn in the city
is completely repaired.

@;Police Station
@PEDIAIMPROVE33
Decreases unhappiness caused by troops away from city by 1.

@;Port Facility
@PEDIAIMPROVE34
City produces veteran naval units.
Any ship spending its entire turn in the city is
completely repaired.

@;SS Structural
@PEDIAIMPROVE35

@;SS Component
@PEDIAIMPROVE36

@;SS Module
@PEDIAIMPROVE37

@;Capitalization
@PEDIAIMPROVE38
Converts production into trade.

@;Pyramids
@PEDIAIMPROVE39
No effect; just a symbol.___________________________________
___________________________________________________________
___After his proclamation as "Prince of Believers", that is,
Caliph, Abd-al-Rahman III ordered in 936 AD the construction 
of a palace complex for his favorite Zahra ("flower" in Arabic).
Construction took approx. 25 years and included not only a
magnificent palace with gardens and fish ponds, but also a
great Mosque, baths, schools of learning, and other dependences.
Marble, jasper, and other costly materials were used lavishly.
But in 1010 all this magnificence was destroyed by the populace
of Crdoba, revolted against the Caliph. For centuries the ruins
remained in complete oblivion until their discovery in 1944. 

@;Hanging Gardens
@PEDIAIMPROVE40
One extra happy citizen per city.___________________________________
___________________________________________________________ 
___ The province of Granada is dominated by Spain's highest mountain chain,
the Sierra Nevada, whose lower southern slopes are known as the
Alpujarras. This region represents the last Muslim stronghold in Spain.
The villages resisted a series of royal edicts demanding their forced
conversion to Christianity and in 1568 rose up in a final, short-lived
revolt. This led to the expulsion of all the Spanish Moors and the
Alpujarras were repopulated with over 12,000 families from the North of
Spain. The villages, however, have retained their traditional Berber
architecture - terraced clusters of grey-white box-shaped houses with
flat clay roofs.

@;Colossus
@PEDIAIMPROVE41
No effect; just a symbol.___________________________________
______________________________________________________________
___ Some say that the name Albaicin means "quarter of the falconers", 
but most historians prefer "quarter of the people of Baeza". When
the Moors were driven by the Christians out of the city of Baeza, near
Jan, in the 13th century, they fled to Granada and re-settled on the
northern part of the hill, creating a suburb which took on the name of
their former home. Most of what we now call Albaicn was in fact the 
Alcazaba, the Moorish citadel. Only the western wall of this fortress 
still exists. 

@;Lighthouse
@PEDIAIMPROVE42
No effect; just a symbol.____________________________________
____________________________________________________________
___ Very close to the Alcazaba there is the Gibralfaro Castle. 
Originally it was a Phoenician palace. In the XIVth century Nasrid king 
Yusuf I built over it the fortress which is conserved until today. Two 
of its towers are connected by ducts with the Alcazaba.

@;Great Library
@PEDIAIMPROVE43
No effect; just a symbol._______________________________________
________________________________________________________________
___ Moiss Maimnides (1135-1204), also known as Moses ben Maimon,
was the most important Jewish philosopher of the Middle Ages. Born in
Crdoba at a time when about one-fifth of the people in Southern
Spain were Jews, he and his family fled to Cairo after the city was
taken by the Almohads. There Maimnides worked as a physician but spent
much time studying the Old Testament and the Jewish Law. In his later
years he became so famous that King Richard of England asked him to be
his royal physician, but Maimnides preferred to stay in Cairo, where
he became chief rabbi and physician to Saladin, sultan of Egypt and Syria.

@;Oracle
@PEDIAIMPROVE44
No effect; just a symbol.___________________________________
___________________________________________________________
___ Mojcar is a coastal town in the province of Almera whose origin 
is obscure. Some historians claim that this town was founded by
Iberian tribes, while others maintain that its origin is Carthaginian.
Nevertheless, the Arabs were the ones who gave this location the 
physical aspect that still holds today. In that time it was an 
important stronghold on the road from Murcia to Almera. In 1453 it was
conquered by Alonso Fajardo, mayor of Lorca. Its walls, which preserve
various relics such as the gates of the city, the tower, and the arch 
of Luciana, date back to that time period. 

@;Great Wall
@PEDIAIMPROVE45
No effect; just a symbol.___________________________________
____________________________________________________________________
__ The Calahorra Tower of Crdoba was built by the Moors and originally
consisted of two towers connected by an arch. A third tower was added 
in the XIVth century under Christian rule. This fortress represents the
three great monotheistic religions of the world, and is a reminder of 
the time in which Muslims, Jews, and Christians lived in peace and 
harmony in the city of Crdoba.

@;Sun Tzu's War Academy
@PEDIAIMPROVE46
No effect; just a symbol.___________________________________
______________________________________________________            
__ Perhaps not coincidentally, the city of Seville has both a Tower of
Silver (Torre de la Plata) and a Tower of Gold (Torre del Oro). The 
former served as a silver depot in the times of Moorish domination,
hence its name.

@;King Richard's Crusade
@PEDIAIMPROVE47
No effect; just a symbol   ________________________________
______________________________________________________            
__ The Alcazaba was the residence of the Nasrids kings of Granada when
visiting the city of Mlaga. The Alcazaba was built in the XIth century,
and is the most important Moorish building of the city. 

@;Marco Polo's Embassy
@PEDIAIMPROVE48
No effect; just a symbol.___________________________________
________________________________________________________________
___ This castle, nowadays completely ruined, is one of the oldest 
Moorish fortresses of Spain, as it was built in the IXth century.

@;Michelangelo's Chapel
@PEDIAIMPROVE49
Makes three unhappy citizens content in every friendly city. _______
______________________________________________________            
__ The Great Mosque of Crdoba, whose construction was
initiated in 784 under the rule of Abd-al-Rahman I, is
irreplaceable proof of the flourishing and splendor of 
the Umayyad Caliphate of Al-Andalus (929-1031). This 
impressive monument harbors one of the most beautiful 
architectural designs ever carried out, with the nineteen
aisles of its hall containing a forest of columns, the
curious overlapping arches and the ribbed cupola.

@;Copernicus' Observatory
@PEDIAIMPROVE50
No effect; just a symbol.___________________________________
______________________________________________________            
__ The Giralda Tower was built between 1172 and 1198 as a minaret
of Seville's Mosque. It is believed that the Giralda Tower served
as an astronomical observatory for the world-renowned astronomers 
of Al-Andalus. When the city of Seville was negotiating its 
surrender to the Castilian troops of King Fernando III "the Saint" 
in 1248, the Moors tried to impose the destruction of the Giralda, 
ashamed that one of the most valued symbols of Islam could pass 
onto Christian hands. Prince Alfonso X --the future Wise King and 
an astronomer himself-- vehemently denied the request, threatening
to kill all the Moors of Seville if the tower was not left untouched.

@;Magellan's Expedition
@PEDIAIMPROVE51
No benefit; just a symbol. _______________________________
___________________________________________________________            
__ Espejo is a small village situated 33 km SE from Crdoba. In its 
highest point, dominating the town, there is a XV century castle, 
a remarkable example of gothic-mudjar style.

@;Shakespeare's Theater
@PEDIAIMPROVE52
All citizens in Granada remain content. ___________________________________
______________________________________________________            
__The Alhambra of Granada is the foremost example of Muslim civil
architecture in the West. This unique building is a fortress, residence,
and royal city all in one. Alhambra, means "Red Castle" in Arabic, a 
name derived from the color of its walls. Granada witnessed the end of 
Arab rule in Spain when Muhammad Abu' Abd Allah (Boabdil), the last 
Nasrid king, surrendered the city to the Catholic Kings on January 2, 
1492. Legend has it that Boabdil could not help bursting into tears 
when for the last time he turned to look back at the Alhambra. His 
mother, Ayesha, reproached him with a sentence that has become famous:
"You may well weep like a woman for what you could not defend like a man".

@;Da Vinci's Workshop
@PEDIAIMPROVE53
No benefit; just a symbol_________________________________
____________________________________________________________________
___ The Elvira Gate was the main door of access to the city of Granada. It
is one of the oldest as well, dating from the IX century, although what
is conserved to this date was built in the XI century. It is situated 
in the Albaicn quarter. Its name (Bab Ilbira) probablemente derives 
from the fact that it stood at the beginning of the road that connected 
Granada with the neighboring city of Madinat Ilbira, today disappeared.

@;J.S. Bach's Cathedral
@PEDIAIMPROVE54
Two extra happy citizens per city.___________________________________
____________________________________________________________________            
___ The magnificent Gardens of Generalife, contiguous to the 
Alhambra, testify to the genius of Al-Andalus engineering. Generalife 
is thought to derive from the Arabic "Jennat al-Arif" meaning Gardens 
of Arif (the architect). The capture of Granada by the Christian troops
of Isabel of Castile and Fernando of Aragon was hailed as a triumph
throughout Christendom, even celebrated at St. Paul's Cathedral in
London with a "Te Deum". It is said that the first Christian knight
to set foot on the Generalife Gardens was a Scotsman. 

@;Isaac Newton's College
@PEDIAIMPROVE55
No effect; just a symbol.___________________________________
______________________________________________________            
_____ This bridge, nowadays completely ruined, was built over 
the Darro river to connect the Albaicn quarter with the Alhambra.

@;Adam Smith's Trading Co.
@PEDIAIMPROVE56
No effect; just a symbol.___________________________________
______________________________________________________________
___ The name Granada is ancient and mysterious. It may mean "great 
castle", for the Roman fortress which once stood on the Albaicn 
quarter. When the Moors came here, the town was largely inhabited by 
Jews, for which they called it Gharnatah-al-Yahud - Granada of the 
Jews. Coincidentally, Granada also means pomegranate in Spanish. Hence
this fruit has become the symbol of the city and appears as such in 
Spain's coat of arms. 

@;Darwin's Voyage
@PEDIAIMPROVE57
No benefit; just a symbol.  ______________________
______________________________________________________            
___ This castle was built by the Moors in the XIII century.

@;The Statue of Liberty
@PEDIAIMPROVE58
No effect; just a symbol. ________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________
___Almera was founded by Abd-al-Rahman III in 955 AD. Only one
century after its foundation, the city attained such a prosperity that
it was said that "When Almera was Almera, Granada was but its farm" 
(Cuando Almera era Almera, Granada era su alquera). From the end of
the Caliphate of Cordoba (1031) to the arrival of the Almoravids in
Al-Andalus (1085), Almera rose as the most important city of Muslim
Spain. The Alcazaba, built in the X century, dominates the town and is
the best preserved Moorish fortress in Spain.

@;The Eiffel Tower
@PEDIAIMPROVE59
No effect; just a symbol.___________________________________
____________________________________________________________________
___ The Alcaicera is the site of the Great Bazaar of Granada, to
which merchants came from all over Islam and Christendom. This bazaar 
was famous for its silk, of which Granada was a major producer since 
the days of the Roman Empire. 

@;Women's Suffrage
@PEDIAIMPROVE60
No effect; just a symbol.___________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
__ The Cathedral of Sevilla was built adjacent to the Giralda Tower, 
with the purpose of making the latter the belltower of the former. The
terrain it occupies was previously occupied by Seville's mosque, which 
itself had been built over a Visigothic church. This impressive building
is the third largest cathedral of the world, after St. Peter in Rome 
and St. Paul in London.

@;Hoover Dam
@PEDIAIMPROVE61
No effect; just a symbol.___________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________
__The city of Jan, capital of an important Moorish principality and
later of the Nasrid kingdom of Granada, preserves part of the net of 
paved streets constructed by the Moors. This is especially notorious
in the district of La Magdalena. The city was captured in 1246 
by the armies of king Fernando III of Castile, which forced Nasrid king
Muhammad I (Ibn al-Amar, Abenmar) to move the capital of his kingdom 
to the city of Granada and to declare himself a vassal of Castile.

@;Manhattan Project
@PEDIAIMPROVE62
No benefit; just a symbol. _________________________________
____________________________________________________________________
___ Rulers of Seville have occupied the site of the Alczar from the
time of the Romans. Here was built the great court of the Abbadids, 
which reached a peak of sophistication and exaggerated sensuality under
al-Mutadid, a ruler who enlarged the palace in order to house a harem
of eight hundred women. Later, under the Almohads, the complex was 
turned into a citadel, forming the heart of the town's fortifications.
Parts of the Almohad walls still survive today, but the present structure 
of the palace dates almost entirely from the Christian period. Seville
was a favoured residence of the Castilian kings for some four centuries
after the reconquest, most particularly of Pedro I the Cruel (1350-1369) 
who lived in and ruled from the Alczar. 

@;United Nations
@PEDIAIMPROVE63
No effect; just a symbol. _________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________
___ The Torre Mocha (Flat Tower) is the principal tower of a Moorish
castle built in the XIII century at Antequera, near Mlaga. Antequera 
fell to the Christians in 1410. Gunpowder is said to have been used 
for the first time in Spain on this occasion.

@;Apollo Program
@PEDIAIMPROVE64
No effect; just a symbol.___________________________________
____________________________________________________________________
___ The Torre del Oro of Seville (Tower of Gold) owes its name to the
characteristic golden reflections produced by the glaze that coated
its twelve-sided exterior. It was built in the XIII century as a part
of the city walls, although it is physically separated from them. It
served as a surveillance point, as a defensive bulwark of the city's 
port, and as a prison. After the Discovery of America, the Torre del 
Oro was utilized to store the silver and gold arriving from the colonies.

@;SETI Program
@PEDIAIMPROVE65
No effect; just a symbol.___________________________________
________________________________________________________________
__ The Cordobese philosopher Averroes (1126-1198), Ibn-Rushd in Arabic,
was a genius of encyclopedic scope. He spent a great part of his
fruitful life as a judge and as a physician. Yet he was known in the
West for being the grand commentator of the philosophy of Aristotle,
and his influence penetrated even the most conservative of Christian
thinkers in the Middle Ages. In fact, Averroes' work prefigured much
of the work of St. Thomas Aquinas. 

@;Cure for Cancer
@PEDIAIMPROVE66
One extra citizen per city.___________________________________
___________________________________________________________
__ Another legendary quarter of the city of Granada, which 
inhabited hillside caves. 

@PEDIAGOVT
@width=600
@title=Civilization: Governments
Hey, if government switching is not permitted in
this scenario, what are you looking for here?

@PEDIAGOVT0
@width=600
@title=Civilization Government: Anarchy

@PEDIAGOVT1
@width=600
@title=Civilization Government: Despotism

@PEDIAGOVT2
@width=600
@title=Civilization Government: Monarchy

@PEDIAGOVT3
@width=600
@title=Civilization Government: Communism

@PEDIAGOVT4
@width=600
@title=Civilization Government: Fundamentalism

@PEDIAGOVT5
@width=600
@title=Civilization Government: Republic

@PEDIAGOVT6
@width=600
@title=Civilization Government: Democracy

@;This line must remain at the end of this file!




















